Detonator utilizing selection of logger mode or blaster mode based on sensed voltages

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6789483
  • Patent Number
    6,789,483
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, July 15, 2003
    21 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 14, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
An electronic blasting system in which the electronic detonator, when attached to a blasting machine or logger, automatically senses and determines whether it is attached to a blasting machine or a logger, preferably by utilizing a different operating voltage for the blasting machine versus that of the logger, with the detonator being capable of distinguishing the respective operating voltages.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed generally to electronic blasting systems, and more particularly, to an electronic blasting system in which the electronic detonator enters either blaster mode or logger mode depending on the sensed operating voltage of the master device to which the detonator is attached.




Prior art electronic blasting systems have not included an electronic detonator that is capable of automatically distinguishing whether the detonator is connected to a blasting machine or a logger upon connection to the blasting machine or logger. Prior art electronic detonators have thus been unable to automatically determine for example, when attached to a logger, that they are attached to a logger rather than a blasting machine.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention comprises an electronic blasting system in which the electronic detonator, when attached to a blasting machine or logger, automatically senses and determines whether it is attached to a blasting machine or a logger. Preferably, this is done by utilizing a different operating voltage for the blasting machine versus that of the logger, with the detonator being capable of ascertaining based upon this voltage the type of master device to which it is connected.




The present invention thus permits the application of automatic safety measures such as a logger mode in which the detonator automatically (either at all times during which it is not attached to a blasting machine or upon being attached to a logger) discharges its firing capacitor, disables its firing capacitor from charging, and/or disables any detonator firing switches.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is an overall view showing a layout of an electronic blasting system in which the present invention may be employed.





FIG. 2

is an overall view showing a layout of an alternate configuration of such an electronic blasting system.





FIG. 3

is a sectional view of a preferred detonator that may be used in the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 4

is a schematic representation of the major electrical aspects of the electronic ignition module (EIM) of the detonator of

FIG. 3

, including an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC).





FIG. 5

is a schematic representation of a preferred circuit design for the ASIC of FIG.


4


.





FIG. 6



a


is a graph of voltage versus time illustrating a preferred voltage modulation-based communication from a blasting machine to detonator(s) in the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 6



b


is a graph of voltage versus time illustrating a preferred voltage modulation-based communication from a logger to detonator(s) the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 7



a


is a graph of current versus time illustrating a preferred current modulation-based response back from a detonator to a blasting machine the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 7



b


is a graph of current versus time illustrating a preferred current modulation-based response back from a detonators to a logger the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 8

is a graph illustrating communication to a detonator and response back from the detonator to any response-eliciting command other than an Auto Bus Detection command.





FIG. 9

is a graph illustrating communication to a detonator and response back from the detonator in response to an AutoBus Detection command.





FIGS. 10



a


,


10




b


,


10




c


, and


10




d


are a flowchart illustrating a preferred logic sequence for the operation of an electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

.





FIG. 11

is a flowchart illustrating a preferred logic sequence for the operation of a detonator that may be used in the electronic blasting system of

FIGS. 1 and 2

, beginning with the reception by the detonator of a Fire command.





FIG. 12

is a graph of voltage and current versus time in a firing capacitor in a detonator such as that of

FIG. 3

, showing a constant-current, rail-voltage regulated charging process.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




To describe the present invention with reference to the details of a particular preferred embodiment, it is noted that the present invention may be employed in an electronic system comprising a network of slave devices, for example, an electronic blasting system in which the slave devices are electronic detonators. As depicted in

FIG. 1

, one embodiment of such an electronic blasting system may comprise a number of detonators


20


, a two-line bus


18


, leg wires


19


including connectors for attaching the detonator to the bus


18


, a logger (not shown), and a blasting machine


40


. The detonators


20


are preferably connected to the blasting machine


40


in parallel (as in

FIG. 1

) or in other arrangements including branch (as with the branched bus


18


′ shown in FIG.


2


), tree, star, or multiple parallel connections. A preferred embodiment of such an electronic blasting system is described below, although it will be readily appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art that other systems or devices could also be used, and many configurations, variations, and modifications of even the particular system described here could be made, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.




The blasting machine


40


and logger may preferably each have a pair of terminals capable of receiving bare copper (bus) wire up to, for example, 14-gauge. The logger's terminals may also preferably be configured to receive steel detonator wires (polarity insensitive), and the logger should have an interface suitable for connecting to the blasting machine


40


. The blasting machine


40


and logger are preferably capable of being operated by a person wearing typical clothing used in mining and blasting operations, e.g., thick gloves. The blasting machine


40


and logger may preferably be portable handheld battery-powered devices that require password entry to permit operation and have illuminated displays providing menus, instructions, keystroke reproduction, and messages (including error messages) as appropriate. The blasting machine


40


may preferably have a hinged lid and controls and indicators that include a lock for the power-on key, a numeric keypad with up/down arrows and “enter” button, a display, an arming button, an indicator light(s), and a firing button.




The blasting machine


40


and logger should be designed for reliable operation in the anticipated range of operating temperatures and endurance of anticipated storage temperatures and are preferably resistant to ammonium nitrate and commonly-used emulsion explosives. The blasting machine


40


and logger are also preferably robust enough to withstand typical treatment in a mining or blasting environment such as being dropped and trodden on, and may thus have casings that are rugged, water and corrosion-resistant and environmentally sealed to operate in most weather. The blasting machine


40


and logger should, as appropriate, meet applicable requirements of CEN document prCEN/TS 13763-27 (NMP 898/FABERG N 0090 D/E) E 2002-06-19 and governmental and industry requirements. To the extent practical, the logger is preferably designed to be incapable of firing any known electric and electronic detonators and the blasting machine


40


to be incapable of firing all known electric detonators and any other known electronic detonators that are not designed for use with the blasting machine


40


. An initial electrical test of the system to detect such a device can be employed to provide further assurance that unintended detonators are not fired.




The bus


18


may be a duplex or twisted pair and should be chosen to have a pre-selected resistance (e.g., in the embodiment described here, preferably 30 to 75 Ω per single conductor. The end of the bus


18


should not be shunted, but its wire insulation should be sufficiently robust to ensure that leakage to ground, stray capacitance, and stray inductance are minimized (e.g., in the embodiment described herein, preferably less than 100 mA leakage for the whole bus, 50 pF/m conductor-to-conductor stray capacitance, and 1 μH/m conductor-to-conductor stray inductance) under all encountered field conditions.




The leg wires


19


and contacts should be chosen to have a pre-selected resistance measured from the detonator terminal to the detonator-to-bus connector (e.g., in the embodiment described here, 50 to 100 Ω per single conductor plus 25 mΩ per connector contact). It will be recognized that the particular detonator-to-bus connector that is used may constrain the choice of bus wire. From a functional standpoint, the detonators


20


may be attached at any point on the bus


18


, although they must of course be a safe distance from the blasting machine


40


.




As shown in

FIG. 3

, a suitable detonator


20


for use in an electronic blasting system such as that described here may comprise an electronic ignition module (EIM)


23


, a shell


29


, a charge


36


(preferably comprising a primary charge and base charge), leg wires


19


, and an end plug


34


that may be crimped in the open end of the shell


29


. The EIM


23


is preferably programmable and includes an igniter


28


and a circuit board to which may be connected various electronic components. In the embodiment described here, the igniter


28


is preferably a hermetically sealed device that includes a glass-to-metal seal and a bridgewire


27


designed to reliably ignite a charge contained within the igniter


28


upon the passage through the bridgewire


27


of electricity via pins


21


at a predetermined “all-fire” voltage level. The EIM


23


(including its electronics and part or all of its igniter


28


) may preferably be insert-molded into an encapsulation


31


to form a single assembly with terminals for attachment of the leg wires


19


. Assignee's co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/158,317 (at pages 5-8 and

FIGS. 1-5

) and Ser. No. 10/158,318 (at pages 3-8 and FIGS.


1


-


6


), both filed on May 29, 2002, are hereby incorporated by reference for their applicable teachings of the construction of such detonators beyond the description that is set forth herein. As taught in those applications, an EIM


23


generally like the one depicted in

FIG. 3

can be manufactured and handled in standalone form, for later incorporation by a user into the user's own custom detonator assembly (including a shell


29


and charge


36


).




The circuit board of the EIM


23


is preferably a microcontroller or programmable logic device or most preferably an application-specific integrated circuit chip (ASIC)


30


, a filtering capacitor


24


, a storage capacitor


25


preferably, e.g., 3.3 to 10 μF (to hold a charge and power the EIM


23


when the detonator


20


is responding back to a master device as discussed further below), a firing capacitor


26


(preferably, e.g., 47 to 374 μF) (to hold an energy reserve that is used to fire the detonator


20


), additional electronic components, and contact pads


22


for connection to the leg wires


19


and the igniter


28


. A shell ground connector


32


protruding through the encapsulation


31


for contact with the shell


29


and connected to, e.g., a metal can pin on the ASIC


30


(described below), which is connected to circuitry within the ASIC


30


(e.g., an integrated silicon controlled resistor or a diode) that can provide protection against electrostatic discharge and radio frequency and electromagnetic radiation that could otherwise cause damage and/or malfunctioning.




Referring to

FIG. 4

, a preferred electronic schematic layout of a detonator


20


such as that of

FIG. 3

is shown. The ASIC


30


is preferably a mixed signal chip with dimensions of 3 to 6 mm. Pins


1


and


2


of the depicted ASIC


30


are inputs to the leg wires


19


and thus the bus


18


, pin


3


is for connection to the shell ground connector


32


and thus the shell


29


, pin


6


is connected to the firing capacitor


26


and bridgewire


27


, pin


7


is connected to the filtering capacitor


24


, pin


10


is connected to the bridgewire


27


, pin


13


is grounded, and pin


14


is connected to the storage capacitor


25


.




Referring specifically now to

FIG. 5

, the ASIC


30


may preferably consist of the following modules: polarity correct, communications interface, EEPROM, digital logic core, reference generator, bridge capacitor control, level detectors, and bridgewire FET. As shown, the polarity correct module may employ polarity-insensitive rectifier diodes to transform the incoming voltage (regardless of its polarity) into a voltage with common ground to the rest of the circuitry of the ASIC


30


. The communication interface preferably shifts down the voltages as received from the blasting machine


40


so that they are compatible with the digital core of the ASIC


30


, and also toggles and transmits the talkback current (described below) to the rectifier bridge (and the system bus lines) based on the output from the digital core. The EEPROM module preferably stores the unique serial identification, delay time, hole registers and various analog trim values of the ASIC


30


. The digital logic core preferably holds the state machine, which processes the data incoming from the blasting machine


40


and outgoing talkback via the communication interface. Reference generators preferably provide the regulated voltages needed to power up the digital core and oscillator (e.g., 3.3V) and also the analog portions to charge the firing capacitor


26


and discharge the firing MOSFET. The bridge capacitor control preferably contains a constant current generator to charge up the firing capacitor


26


and also a MOSFET to discharge the firing capacitor


26


when so desired. The level detectors are preferably connected to the firing capacitor


26


to determine based on its voltage whether it is in a charged or discharged state. Finally, the bridgewire MOSFET preferably allows the passage of charge or current from the firing capacitor


26


across the bridgewire


27


upon actuation by pulling to ground.




Communication Protocol




Communication of data in a system such as shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

may preferably consist of a 2-wire bus polarity independent serial protocol between the detonators


20


and a logger or blasting machine


40


. Communications from the blasting machine


40


may either be in individual mode (directed to a particular detonator


20


only) or broadcast mode where all the detonators


20


will receive the same command (usually charging and fire commands). The communication protocol is preferably serial, contains cyclic redundancy error checking (CRC), and synchronization bits for timing accuracy among the detonators


20


. There is also a command for the auto-detection of detonators


20


on the bus


18


that otherwise had not been entered into the blasting machine


40


.




When the blasting machine


40


and detonators


20


are connected, the system idle state voltage is preferably set at V


B,H


. The slave detonators


20


then preferably obtain their power from the bus


18


during the high state, which powers up their storage capacitors


25


. Communications from the blasting machine


40


or logger to the ASICs


30


is based on voltage modulation pulsed at the appropriate baud rate, which the ASICs


30


decipher into the associated data packets.




As shown in

FIGS. 6



a


and


6




b


, different operating voltages V


L,L


and V


L,H


can be used by the logger versus those of the blasting machine


40


, V


B,L


and V


B,H


. In the embodiment described here, suitable values for V


L,L


and V


L,H


are 1 to 3V and 5.5 to 14V, respectively, while suitable values for V


B,L


and V


B,H


are 0 to 15V and 28V or higher, respectively. Further, a detonator


20


in such a system may preferably utilize this difference to sense whether it is connected to the blasting machine


40


or logger (i.e., whether it is in logger or blaster mode), such as by going into logger mode when the voltage is less than a certain value (e.g., 15V) and blaster mode when it is above another value (e.g., 17V). This differentiation permits the ASIC


30


of the detonator


20


to, when in logger mode, preferably switch on a MOSFET to discharge the firing capacitor


26


and/or disable its charging and/or firing logic. The differentiation by the detonator


20


is also advantageously simplified if there is no overlap between the high/low ranges of the blasting machine


40


and the logger, as shown in

FIGS. 6



a


and


6




b


. (Each of these figures depicts nominal values for high and low, but it is further preferable that the maximum and minimum acceptable values for the highs and lows also do not permit overlap).




On the other hand, instead of voltage modulation, the communication from the ASICs


30


to the blasting machine


40


or logger is based on current modulation (“current talkback”), as shown in

FIGS. 7



a


and


7




b


. With current modulation, the ASICs


30


toggle the amount of current to the logger (between I


L,L


, preferably 0 mA, and I


L,H


, preferably a value that is at least 0.1 mA but substantially less than I


B,H


) or blasting machine


40


(between I


B,L


, preferably 0 mA, and I


B,H


, preferably a value that is at least 5 mA but not so high as to possibly overload the system when multiple detonators


20


respond), which then senses and deciphers these current pulse packets into the associated data sent. This current talkback from the detonators back to the master can be performed when the voltage of the bus


18


is high or low, but if performed when the bus


18


is high, the ASICs


30


are continuously replenishing the storage capacitors


25


, causing a high background current draw (especially when many detonators


20


are connected to the bus


18


). When the bus


18


is preferably held low, however, the rectifier bridge diodes are reverse-biased and the ASICs


30


draw operating current from the storage capacitors


25


rather than the bus


18


, so as to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the sensed talkback current at the blasting machine


40


or logger. Thus, the current talkback is preferably conducted when the bus


18


is held low. The toggling of current by the ASICs


30


can be suitably achieved by various known methods such as modulating the voltage on a sense resistor, a current feedback loop on an op amp, or incorporating constant current sinks, e.g. current mirror.




Serial Data Communication (Serial Data Line) Organization




In communications to and from the master devices and slave devices, the serial data communication interface may preferably comprise a packet consisting of a varying or, more preferably, a fixed number (preferably 10 to 20) of “bytes” or “words” that are each preferably, e.g., twelve bits long, preferably with the most significant bit being sent first. Depending on the application, other suitable sized words could alternately be used, and/or a different number of words could be used within the packet. Also, a different packet structure could alternately be employed for communications from the master device as compared to those of communications from the slave devices.




The first word of the packet of the embodiment described here is preferably an initial synchronization word and can be structured such that its first three bits are zero so that it is effectively received as a nine-bit word (e.g., 101010101, or any other suitable arrangement).




In addition to containing various data as described below, the subsequent words may also preferably each contain a number of bits—for example, four bits at the beginning or end of each word—that are provided to permit mid-stream re-synchronization (resulting in a word structured as 0101_D7:D0 or D7:D0





0101 and thus having eight bits that can be used to convey data, or “data bits”). Preferred schemes of initial synchronization and re-synchronization are described further under the corresponding heading below.




Another word of the packet can be used to communicate commands, such as is described under the corresponding heading below.




Preferably five to eight additional bytes of the packet are used for serial identification (serial ID) to uniquely (as desired) identify each detonator in a system. The data bits of the serial ID data may preferably consist at least in part of data such as revision number, lot number, and wafer number, for traceability purposes. In broadcast commands from the master device, these words do not need to contain a serial ID for a particular detonator and thus may consist of arbitrary values, or of dummy values that could be used for some other purpose.




Additional words of the packet are preferably used to convey delay time information (register) (and comprise enough data bits to specify a suitable range of delay time, e.g., in the context of an electronic blasting system, a maximum delay of on the order of, e.g., a minute) in suitable increments, e.g., 1 ms in the context of an electronic blasting system. (A setting of zero is preferably considered a default error).




In the embodiment described here, one or more additional words of the packet are preferably used for scratch information, which can be used to define blasting hole identifications (hole IDs), with these words comprising enough data bits to accommodate the maximum desired number of hole IDs.




One or more additional words of the packet are preferably used for a cyclic redundancy check (for example, using CRC-8 algorithm based on the polynomial, x


8


+x


2


+x+1), or less preferably, a parity check, or an error-correction check, e.g., using hamming code. Preferably, neither the initial synchronization word nor the synchronization bits are used in the CRC calculation for either transmission or reception.




Synchronization Word and Re-Synchronization Bits




In the embodiment and application described here, a preferred range of possible communication rates may be 300 to 9600 baud. In a packet sent by the master device, the initial synchronization word is used to determine the speed at which the slave device receives and processes the next word in the packet from the master device; likewise, in a packet sent by the slave device, the initial synchronization word is used to determine the speed at which the master device receives and processes the next word from the slave device. The first few (enough to obtain relatively accurate synchronization), but not all, of the bits of this initial synchronization word are preferably sampled, in order to permit time for processing and determination of the communication rate prior to receipt of the ensuing word. Synchronization may be effected by, e.g., the use of a counter/timer monitoring transitions in the voltage level low to high or high to low, and the rates of the sampled bits are preferably averaged together. Throughout transmission of the ensuing words of the packet, i.e., “mid-stream,” re-synchronization is then preferably conducted by the receiving device assuming that (e.g., 4-bit) synchronization portions are provided in (preferably each of) those ensuing words. In this way, it can be ensured that synchronization is not lost during the transfer of a packet.




If requested, a slave device responds back, after transmission of a packet from the master device, at the last sampled rate of that packet, which is preferably that of the last word of the packet. (This rate can be viewed as the rate of the initial synchronization word as skewed during the transmission of the packet—in an electronic blasting machine, such skew is generally more pronounced during communication from the detonator to the logger). Referring to

FIGS. 8 and 9

, communication from a master to a slave device, and a synchronized response back from the slave device, is shown.




As depicted in

FIG. 8

, the device may preferably be configured and programmed to initiate a response back to individually-addressed commands no later than a predetermined period (after the end trailing edge of the serial input transfer) comprising the time required to complete the input transfer, the serial interface setup for a response back, and the initial portion of the synchronization word (e.g., 000101010101). Preferably the bus


18


should be pulled (and held) low within the capture and processing delay.




Command Word




The data bits of the command word from the master device (e.g., blasting machine or logger) in the serial communication packet may preferably be organized so that one bit is used to indicate (e.g., by being set high) that the master device is communicating, another is used to indicate whether it is requesting a read or a write, another indicates whether the command is a broadcast command or a single device command, and other bits are used to convey the particular command. Similarly, the data bits of the command word from the slave device (e.g., detonator) may preferably be organized so that one bit is used to indicate that the device is responding (e.g., by being set high), another indicates whether a CRC error has occurred, another indicates whether a device error (e.g., charge verify) has occurred, and other bits are discretely used to convey “status flags.”




The flag data bits from devices can be used to indicate the current state of the device and are preferably included in all device responses. These flags can be arranged, for example, so that one flag indicates whether or not the device has been detected on the bus, another indicates whether it has been calibrated, another indicates whether it is currently charged, and another indicates whether it has received a Fire command. A flag value of 1 (high) can then signify a response in the affirmative and 0 (low) in the negative.




A preferred set of useful substantive blasting machine/logger commands may include: Unknown Detonator Read Back (of device settings); Single Check Continuity (of detonator bridgewire); Program Delay/Scratch; Auto Bus Detection (detect unidentified devices); Known Detonator Read Back; Check Continuity (of the detonators' bridgewires); Charge (the firing capacitors); Charge Verify; Calibrate (the ASICs' internal clocks); Calibrate Verify; Fire (initiates sequences leading to firing of the detonators); DisCharge; DisCharge Verify; and, Single DisCharge. As will be explained further below, some of these commands are “broadcast” commands (sent with any arbitrary serial identification and its concomitant proper CRC code) that only elicit a response from any detonator(s) that have not been previously identified or in which an error has occurred, while others are directed to a specific detonator identified by its serial ID.

FIGS. 10



a-d


show a flowchart of a preferred logical sequence of how such commands may be used in the operation of an electronic blasting system, and specific details of the preferred embodiment described here are set forth for each individual command under the Operation headings.




Operation—by Logger




In use, the detonators


20


are preferably first each connected individually to a logger, which preferably reads the detonator serial ID, performs diagnostics, and correlates hole number to detonator serial ID. At this point, the operator can then program the detonator delay time if it has not already been programmed. Once a detonator


20


is connected to the logger, the operator powers up the logger and commands the reading of serial ID, the performing of diagnostics, and, if desired, the writing of a delay time. As the serial ID is read, the logger may assign a sequential hole number and retains a record of the hole number, serial ID, and delay time.




The foregoing sequence can beneficially be accomplished using the above-noted Unknown Detonator Read Back and Single Check Continuity commands and possibly the Program Delay/Scratch command. Preferred details of these commands are set forth below.




Unknown Detonator Read Back




By this command, the blasting machine


40


or logger requests a read back of the serial ID, delay time, scratch information, and status flags (notably including its charge status) of a single, unknown detonator


20


. The bus detection flag is not set by this command. (As an alternate to this command, the logger could instead perform a version of the Auto Bus Detection and Known Detonator Read Back commands described below).




Single Check Continuity




By this command, the logger requests a continuity check of a single detonator


20


of which the serial ID is known. The logger may (preferably) issue this command prior to the programming (or re-programming) of a delay time for the particular detonator


20


. In response to this command, the ASIC


30


of the detonator


20


causes a continuity check to be conducted on the bridgewire


27


. The continuity check can be beneficially accomplished, for example, by the ASIC


30


(at its operating voltage) causing a constant current (e.g., about 27 μA with a nominally 1.8 Ω bridgewire


27


in the embodiment described here) to be passed through the bridgewire


27


via, e.g., a MOSFET switch and measuring the resulting voltage across the bridgewire


27


with, e.g., an A/D element. The overall resistance of the bridgewire


27


can then be calculated from the ohmic drop across the bridgewire


27


and the constant current used. If the calculated resistance is above a range of threshold values (e.g., in the embodiment described here, 30 to 60 kΩ range), the bridgewire


27


is considered to be open, i.e., not continuous. If such error is detected, then the detonator


20


responds back with a corresponding error code (i.e., continuity check failure as indicated by the respective data bit of the command word).




Program Delay/Scratch




By this command, if the detonator


20


has not already been programmed with a delay time or if a new delay time is desired, the operator can program the detonator


20


accordingly. Through this command, the blasting machine


40


or logger requests a write of the delay and scratch information for a single detonator


20


of which the serial ID is known. This command also preferably sets the bus detection flag (conveyed by the respective data bit of the command word) high.




Operation—by Blasting Machine




After some or all detonators


20


may have been thus processed by the logger, they are connected to the bus


18


. A number of detonators


20


can be connected depending on the specifics of the system (e.g., up to a thousand or more in the particular embodiment described here). The operator then powers up the blasting machine


40


, which initiates a check for the presence of incompatible detonators and leakage, and may preferably be prompted to enter a password to proceed. The logger is then connected to the blasting machine


40


and a command issued to transfer the logged information (i.e., hole number, serial ID, and delay time for all of the logged detonators), and the blasting machine


40


provides a confirmation when this information has been received. (Although used in the preferred embodiment, a logger need not be separately used to log detonators


20


, and a system could be configured in which the blasting machine


40


logs the detonators


20


, e.g., using Auto Bus Detection command or other means are used to convey the pertinent information to the blasting machine


40


and/or conduct any other functions that are typically associated with a logger such as the functions described above).




The blasting machine


40


may preferably be programmed to then require the operator to command a system diagnostic check before proceeding to arming the detonators


20


, or to perform such a check automatically. This command causes the blasting machine


40


to check and perform diagnostics on each of the expected detonators


20


, and report any errors, which must be resolved before firing can occur. The blasting machine


40


and/or ASICs


30


are also preferably programmed so that the operator can also program or change the delay for specific detonators


20


as desired.




The blasting machine


40


and/or ASICs


30


are preferably programmed to permit the operator to arm the detonators


20


, i.e., issue the Charge command (and the ASICs


30


to receive this command) once there are no errors, which causes the charging of the firing capacitors


26


. Similarly, the blasting machine


40


and/or ASICs


30


are preferably programmed to permit the operator to issue the Fire command (and the ASICs


30


to receive this command) once the firing capacitors


26


have been charged and calibrated. The blasting machine


40


and/or ASICs


30


are also preferably programmed so that if the Fire command is not issued within a set period (e.g., 100 s), the firing capacitors


26


are discharged and the operator must restart the sequence if it is wished to perform a firing.




The blasting machine


40


is also preferably programmed so that, upon arming, an arming indicator light(s) alights (e.g., red), and then, upon successful charging of the detonators


20


, that light preferably changes color (e.g., to green) or another one alights to indicate that the system is ready to fire. The blasting machine


40


is also preferably programmed so that the user must hold down separate arming and firing buttons together until firing or else the firing capacitors


26


are discharged and the operator must restart the sequence to perform firing.




The foregoing sequence can be beneficially accomplished with other commands noted above, preferred details of which are discussed below.




Auto Bus Detection




This command permits the blasting machine


40


to detect any unknown (i.e., unlogged) detonators


20


that are connected to the bus


18


, forcing such detonators to respond with their serial ID, delay data, scratch data, and current status flag settings. The blasting machine


40


and ASIC


30


may preferably be configured and programmed so that this command is used as follows:




1. The blasting machine


40


broadcasts the Auto Bus Detection command packet on the bus


18


. All detonators


20


receiving the command that have not previously been detected on the bus


18


(as indicated by their respective bus detection status flag settings) calculate a “clock” value that correlates to their serial IDs and/or delay time information, and then enter a wait state. The correlated clock value can, for example, be calculated from an 11-bit number derived from the CRC-8 of the combined serial ID and selected data bits (e.g., 8 bits) of the delay register word of the Auto Bus Detection command packet, so that adequate time is afforded between each possible clock value for the initiation of a response (including any delay as described below) from a corresponding detonator


20


.




2. The blasting machine


40


then begins issuing a “clock” sequence on the bus


18


that continues (except when halted or aborted as described below) until it reaches a number that correlates to the highest possible detonator serial ID in the system (for example, using the 11-bit number described above, there may be 2,048 possible clock values). Time must be allowed between the end of the Auto Bus Detection command packet and issuance of a clock that correlates to the first possible serial ID, to permit calculation by the ASICs


30


of the clock values that correlate to their serial IDs. This can be accomplished by including a wait time (e.g., 10 μs in the embodiment described here) between the end of the detection command packet and the leading edge of the first transition of the clock. To enable current talkback (as described elsewhere herein), the bus


18


is preferably held low during this time, but it can alternately be held high.




3. When the clock value for a particular unlogged detonator


20


is reached, the ASIC


30


of that detonator


20


responds. In the embodiment described here, time (during which the bus


18


is held high or low, preferably low) is permitted for the initiation of a response that is delayed by a predetermined period as shown in FIG.


9


. The system may preferably be configured so that if the bus


18


is not pulled low before a predetermined timeout period (e.g., 4.096 ms), the detection process will abort.




4. Upon sensing a response from one or more detonators


20


, the blasting machine


40


halts the clock sequence and holds the bus (preferably low) until the full response packet is received, at which point the clock sequence resumes.




Alternately, adequate time for the transmission of a full packet could be permitted between the counting of each clock value that correlates to a possible serial ID, however, this would be slower. The blasting machine


40


records at least the serial ID (and optionally also the device settings) of any responding detonators


20


. If more than one ASIC


30


begins responding simultaneously, the blasting machine


40


preferably ignores such responses and preferably resumes the clock sequence as it would otherwise.




5. The process starting with the Auto Bus Detection command packet is then repeated using a different delay time or a different dummy serial ID until no unlogged detonators


20


respond (i.e., until a full clock sequence is counted out without any devices responding), at which point it is deemed that all detonators


20


connected to the bus


18


are identified.




6. When the autobus detection sequence is complete, the blasting machine


40


then sends (in any desired order such as by serial ID) the Known Detonator Read Back command (described immediately below) to each individual known detonator


20


, i.e., all those that responded to the Auto Bus Detection command, as well as all those that were initially identified to the blasting machine


40


by the logger.




Known Detonator Read Back




By this command, the blasting machine


40


or logger requests a read back of a single detonator


20


of which the serial ID is known. In response to this command, the detonator


20


provides its serial ID, delay time, scratch information, and status flags (notably including its charge status). This command preferably sets the bus detection flag high so that the device no longer responds to an Auto Bus Detection command.




Check Continuity




The system should be configured so that this command is required to be issued before the Charge command (described immediately below) can be issued. By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to all detonators


20


connected to the bus


18


to perform a continuity check. In response, each ASIC


30


in the detonators


20


performs a continuity check on the bridgewire


27


such as is described above with respect to the Single Check Continuity command sent to a specific detonator


20


.




Charge




By this command, the blasting machine


40


requests a charge of all detonators


20


connected to the bus


18


. After charging of each detonator


20


, its charge status flag is set high. The detonators


20


respond back to the blasting machine


40


only if an error has occurred (e.g., a CRC error, the bus detection flag is not high, or—if staggered charging as described below is used—the scratch register is set to zero), in which case the response includes the corresponding error code.




If a large number of detonators


20


are connected to the bus


18


, charging may preferably be staggered so that the detonators


20


are each charged at different times such as by the following steps:




1. The blasting machine


40


broadcasts the Charge command on the bus


18


.




2. The blasting machine


40


then begins issuing a clock sequence at a selected temporal frequency on the bus


18


, which sequence continues up to a certain maximum number corresponding to the maximum number of the scratch register, e.g., 4,096.




3. When the number of clocks reaches a number programmed in the scratch register of a particular detonator


20


, that detonator


20


charges. The detonators


20


can have unique scratch values or they can be grouped by scratch number into banks (of e.g., 2 to 100) that thus charge concurrently. The clock frequency should be timed and the detonator scratch values set sequentially in such a way as to ensure that a desired minimum individual (i.e., non-overlapping) charging time is afforded to each detonator


20


or bank of detonators


20


, which can be done in a number of ways (e.g., using scratch numbers of 1, 2, 3 . . . at a given clock frequency has the same effect as scratch numbers of 2, 4, 6 . . . at a clock frequency that is twice as fast). When the clock corresponding to the detonator


20


is received, the ASIC


30


begins charging the firing capacitor


26


(see, e.g.,

FIG. 5

) until the capacitor voltage reaches a predefined charged threshold, at which point charge-topping of the firing capacitor


26


is then maintained.




4. If the capacitor voltage threshold is not achieved within a specified desired window (e.g., in the present embodiment, between 1.048 s and 8.39 s after the ASIC


30


begins charging the firing capacitor


26


), then the ASIC


30


times out and sets the charge status flag to low (but does not need to be programmed to send a response communicating the error at this time, assuming that the Verify Charge command described below is used).




5. The charge process ends when the bus


18


is held low for more than a predetermined timeout period, e.g., 4.096 ms.




The minimum time required to charge a network of detonators in a staggered fashion thus essentially equals the desired individual (or bank) capacitor charging time (which in turn depends on the particular charging process used and the size of the firing capacitor


26


) multiplied by the number of detonators


20


(or banks). For example, in the present embodiment, about 3 s per capacitor may be desirable with a system including 100 detonators or detonator banks in which the constant-current regulation process described below is employed, and results in an overall charging time of 300 s. Alternatively, the charge clocking can be controlled over a wide range of scratch values, e.g., clocking to a certain number of pulses (where all detonators with scratch values up to this pulse number will charge), pausing the clocking momentarily to allow these detonators to adequately charge to full capacity before issuing further clock pulses, pausing and resuming again if desired, and so on.




At the device level, the electricity supplied to each firing capacitor


26


during charging may preferably be through a constant-current, rail-voltage regulated charging process, as is shown in FIG.


12


. In such a charging process, the current draw is held constant at a relatively low amount (e.g., at 1 mA) while voltage increases linearly with time until a “rail-voltage” (which is the regulator voltage, which is in turn suitably chosen together with the capacitance of the firing capacitor


26


and the firing energy of the bridgewire


27


) is reached, after which the voltage remains constant at the rail voltage and the current draw thus decreases rapidly. Such charging regulation, which is known for example in the field of laptop computer battery chargers, may be accomplished by several methods such as a current-mirror using two bipolar transistors or MOSFETs, a fixed gate-source voltage on a JFET or MOSFET, or a current feedback using an op amp or comparator.




Charge Verify




By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to all detonators


20


on the bus


18


to verify that they are charged. If an ASIC


30


did not charge (as reflected by a low charge status flag setting per the charge procedure described above) or has a CRC error, it immediately responds back with the appropriate error code and other information including its status flags. The Charge Verify command can also effectively provide a verification of the proper capacitance of the firing capacitor


26


if a charging window time as described above with reference to the charging process is employed and its limits are respectively defined to correspond to the time required (using the selected charging process) to charge a firing capacitor


26


having the upper and lower limits of acceptable capacitance. For example, in the embodiment described here, using a constant-current (1 mA), rail-voltage limited charging, a 47 μF capacitor nominally charges to 25V in 1.2 s, and a window of from 0.5 to 3 s corresponds to acceptable maximum/minimum capacitance limits (i.e., about 20 to 100 μF), or a 374 μF capacitor nominally charges to 25V in 9.4 s, and a window of from 6.25 to 12.5 s corresponds to acceptable maximum/minimum capacitance limits (i.e., about 250 to 500 μF). If the blasting machine


40


receives an error message in response to this command, it can re-broadcast the Charge command and terminate the sequence, or alternately it could be configured and programmed to permit the individual diagnosing and individual charging of any specific detonators


20


responding with errors.




Calibrate




Each one of detonators


20


contains an internal oscillator (see FIG.


5


), which is used to control and measure duration of any delays or time periods generated or received by the detonator


20


. The exact oscillator frequency of a given detonator


20


is not known and varies with temperature. In order to obtain repeatable and accurate blast timing, this variation must be compensated for. In the present embodiment this is accomplished by requesting the detonator


20


to measure (in terms of its own oscillator frequency) the duration of a fixed calibration pulse, NOM (preferably, e.g., 0.5 to 5 s in an embodiment such as that described here), which is generated by the blasting machine


40


using its internal oscillator as reference. In the present embodiment, the detonator


20


then uses the measured pulse duration, CC, to compute the firing delay in terms of the oscillator counts using the following formula: counts=DLY*(CC/NOM) where DLY is the value of the delay register. (In the present embodiment it is assumed that the temperature of the detonator


20


has become stable or is changing insignificantly by the time the actual blast is performed).




By the Calibrate command (the address bytes of which may contain any arbitrary data), the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to calibrate all detonators


20


on the bus


18


. A detonator


20


responds back to the calibrate command only if an error has occurred (e.g., a CRC error or the bus detection or charge status flags are not high), in which case the response includes the corresponding error code. If there is no error, immediately after the calibration packet has been received, the detonator


20


waits until the bus


18


is pulled high for a set period (e.g., the same period described above as NOM), at which point the ASIC


30


begins counting at its oscillating frequency until the bus


18


is pulled back low to end the calibration sequence. The number of counts counted out by the ASIC


30


during this set period is then stored in the detonator's calibration register (and is later used by the ASIC


30


to determine countdown values) and the calibration flag is set high. Pulling the bus


18


low ends the Calibrate command sequence; and the rising edge of the next transition to high on the bus


18


is then recognized as the start of a new command.




Calibrate Verify




By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to verify calibration of all detonators


20


on the bus


18


. In response, each detonator


20


checks that the value in its calibration register is within a certain range (e.g., in the embodiment described here, +/−40%) of a value corresponding to the ideal or nominal number of oscillator cycles that would occur during the period NOM. A detonator


20


responds back only if the calibration value is out of range or another error has occurred (e.g., a CRC error or the bus detection, charge, or calibrate status flags are not high), in which case the response includes the corresponding error code.




Fire




By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to fire all detonators


20


on the bus


18


. A detonator


20


responds back to this command only if an error has occurred (e.g., a CRC error, the bus detection, charge, or calibrate status flags are not high, or the delay register is set to zero), in which case the response includes the corresponding error code. Otherwise, in response to this command, the ASIC


30


of each detonator


20


initiates a countdown/fire sequence and sets the fire flag high. The blasting machine


40


and logger and/or ASIC


30


may beneficially be configured and programmed such that this process is as follows (see also FIG.


11


):




1. Upon receipt of the Fire command, if there are CRC or procedural errors and the ASIC


30


has not yet successfully received a Fire command, then the device answers back immediately with the appropriate error code. (In which case, as shown in

FIG. 10



d


, the blasting machine


40


preferably responds by broadcasting a Discharge command to all detonators


20


; alternately, it could be designed to permit the individual diagnosis and correction of any detonators


20


responding with an error, or it can issue further Fire commands as noted in step 3 below). If there are no errors, then the ASIC


30


enters a “pre-fire countdown,” the delay time for which is programmed by delay information of the packet that conveys the Fire command. For example, two bits of a delay register byte can correspond to four different pre-fire countdown delays that are based on the preceding calibration sequence and shifting, e.g., with a value of 1-1 corresponds to a 4.096 s delay, 1-0 to a 2.048 s delay, 0-1 to a 1.024 s delay, and 0-0 to a 0.512 s delay.




2. At any time during the counting down of the pre-fire countdown, the detonator


20


can receive a Single Discharge or Discharge command, or another Fire command. If the Fire command is sent again, then the ASIC


30


verifies there are no CRC errors. If there is a CRC error, then the new Fire command is ignored and the existing pre-fire countdown continues to progress. If there are no CRC errors, then the ASIC


30


resets its pre-fire countdown value to the value determined by the delay register of the new Fire command packet, and starts a new pre-fire countdown based on the new delay value. Depending on the initial pre-fire countdown delay value, it may be possible, and is preferred, to send the Fire command several (in the embodiment described here, three) additional times prior to the expiration of the pre-fire countdown.




3. If neither Discharge command is sent before expiration of the pre-fire countdown, the ASIC


30


checks that the bus


18


voltage exceeds a minimum absolute threshold value. If it does not, then the detonator


20


automatically discharges; otherwise, a “final fire countdown” begins and the communication interface of the detonator


20


is preferably disabled so that no further commands can be received. The final fire countdown time is preferably determined based on the calibration described above and a delay value programmed into a delay register in the ASIC


30


. At the conclusion of the countdown of this final fire countdown time, the ASIC


30


causes the firing capacitor


26


to be discharged through bridgewire


27


, resulting in detonation.




It has been found that a system constructed according to the preferred specifics described here, with up to a thousand or more detonators


20


networked to the blasting machine


40


, can reliably provide a timing delay accuracy of better than 80 ppm (e.g., 0.8 ms with 10 s delay).




Discharge




By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to discharge all detonators


20


on the bus


18


. A detonator


20


responds back to this command only if a CRC error has occurred in which case the response includes the corresponding error code (the discharge command is not performed in this case). Otherwise, in response to this command, the ASIC


30


of each detonator


20


stops any fire countdown that may be in progress, and causes the firing capacitor


26


to be discharged.




Discharge Verify




By this command, the blasting machine


40


broadcasts a request to verify the discharging of all detonators


20


on the bus


18


. In response, the ASIC


30


of each detonator


20


verifies that the firing capacitor


26


is discharged, responding back only if a CRC or verification error has occurred (e.g., a CRC error or the bus detection, charge, or calibrate status flags are not high), in which case the response includes the corresponding error code.




Single Discharge




This command is the same as the Discharge command discussed above except that it requires a correct serial ID of a specific detonator


20


on the bus


18


, which detonator responds back with its serial ID, delay and scratch information, status flags, and any error codes.




One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that even the particular system described here is subject to numerous additions and modifications. For example, not all of the commands described above would necessarily be required, they could be combined, separated, and otherwise modified in many ways, and numerous additional commands could be implemented. As some of many examples, a command could implemented to clear all bus detection flags of detonators


20


on the bus


18


, to permit resetting of the bus detection process, a command could be implemented to permit individual charge and/or charge verify of selected detonators


20


, etc. Further, other synchronization schemes (e.g., using a third clock line instead of dynamic synchronization) and/or protocols could be used if suitable for a particular application.




Although the present invention has been described in the context of one particular preferred embodiment, it will be understood that numerous variations, modifications, and other applications are also within the scope of the present invention. For example, although a preferred embodiment utilizing differentiated operating voltages has been described, it will be readily apparent that other means could be used to permit the detonator to distinguish which device it is attached to, such the blasting machine and logger being configured and/or programmed to issue an initial identifying announcement that is interpretable by any attached slave devices when the blasting machine or logger is powered up and/or when its terminals are connected to something. Thus, the foregoing detailed description of a preferred embodiment is not intended to limit the invention in any way; instead the invention is limited only by the following claims and their legal equivalents.



Claims
  • 1. An electronic detonator for use in an electronic blasting system including a blasting machine and a logger, wherein said electronic detonator is configured and/or programmed enter a blaster mode when it is attached to a blasting machine and to enter a logger mode when it is attached to a logger, wherein said blasting machine has a first operating voltage range and said logger has a second operating voltage range and said electronic detonator is configured and/or programmed to distinguish between said first and second operating voltage ranges, and wherein said first and second operating voltage ranges do not overlap each other.
  • 2. The electronic detonator of claim 1, wherein said electronic detonator is further configured and/or programmed to implement safety precautions when it is not in blaster mode.
  • 3. The electronic detonator of claim 2, further including a firing capacitor, wherein said safety precautions include automatic discharging of a firing capacitor.
  • 4. The electronic detonator of claim 2, further including a firing capacitor, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a firing capacitor from charging.
  • 5. The electronic detonator of claim 2, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a detonator firing switch from closing.
  • 6. An electronic blasting system including an electronic detonator wherein the system is configured and/or programmed so that said electronic detonator enters either blaster mode or logger mode depending upon whether it is attached to a blasting machine or a logger, wherein said system includes a blasting machine having a first operating voltage range, wherein said logger has a second operating voltage range, and wherein and said electronic detonator is configured and/or programmed to distinguish between said first and second operating voltage ranges, and wherein said first and second operating voltage ranges do not overlap each other.
  • 7. The electronic blasting system of claim 6, wherein said electronic detonator is configured and/or programmed to implement safety precautions when it is not in blaster mode.
  • 8. The electronic blasting system of claim 7, wherein said electronic detonator includes a firing capacitor and wherein said safety precautions include the disabling of said firing capacitor.
  • 9. The electronic blasting system of claim 7, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a detonator firing switch from closing.
  • 10. A method of selecting between logger mode and blaster mode in an electronic detonator, comprising the following steps:a) attaching to an electronic detonator a master device that is either a blasting machine having a first operating voltage range or a logger having a second operating voltage range wherein said first and second operating voltage ranges do not overlap each other, without first manually setting said electronic detonator in a mode that is selected based on whether said master device is a blasting machine or a logger; b) operating said attached master device at its respective operating voltage range and issuing one or more signals from said master device; c) said electronic detonator distinguishing whether said attached master device is a blasting machine or a logger; and, d) operating said electronic detonator in a mode that corresponds to whether said attached master device is a blasting machine or a logger.
  • 11. The method of claim 10, further comprising the step of said electronic detonator effecting safety precautions when it is not in blaster mode.
  • 12. The method of claim 11, wherein said electronic detonator includes a firing capacitor and wherein said safety precautions include the disabling of said firing capacitor.
  • 13. The method of claim 11, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a detonator firing switch from closing.
  • 14. The method of claim 12, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a detonator firing switch from closing.
  • 15. The method of claim 10, wherein step a) comprises attaching said master device to said electronic detonator via a connection that includes a bus.
  • 16. The method of claim 10, further comprising the step of said electronic detonator communicating to said attached master device via current modulation based talkback.
  • 17. The electronic detonator of claim 2, wherein said safety precautions include preventing acceptance of any charge command.
  • 18. The electronic detonator of claim 2, wherein said safety precautions include preventing a charging switch from closing.
  • 19. The electronic detonator of claim 2, further including a firing capacitor, and wherein said safety precautions include preventing acceptance of any firing command.
  • 20. The electronic blasting system of claim 7, wherein said electronic detonator includes a firing capacitor and wherein said safety precautions include the automatic discharging of a firing capacitor.
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
5014622 Jullian May 1991 A
5520114 Guimard et al. May 1996 A
5894103 Shann Apr 1999 A
6000338 Shann Dec 1999 A
6173651 Pathe et al. Jan 2001 B1
6618237 Eddy et al. Sep 2003 B2